The first hominoid from the Maragheh Formation, Iran

2016 
Miocene hominoid fossils are known from Africa and Eurasia, in the latter ranging widely from western Europe to Anatolia and from South Asia to Southeast/East Asia. Iran is located between the known western and eastern Eurasian hominoid distributions and is potentially important in understanding Miocene hominoid dispersal patterns. Maragheh is a late Miocene fossil locality in northwestern Iran, well known since the nineteenth century for its abundant mammalian fossils. However, until now, the only primate fossils reported from Maragheh or Iran were the Old World monkey Mesopithecus pentelicus. Recent field research at Maragheh has changed this situation by the discovery of the first hominoid fossil from Iran, a maxillary fragment with well-preserved second and third molars. Here, we provide a detailed description of this new specimen, comparing it with other similarly large-sized Eurasian late Miocene hominoids, Ouranopithecus, Ankarapithecus, Sivapithecus, and Indopithecus. Molar morphology of the Maragheh hominoid is similar to that of these Eurasian Miocene genera, with only minor differences in morphology and wear pattern. Based on the presently available materials, we tentatively prefer the interpretation that the Maragheh hominoid may be related more closely to either Ankarapithecus or Sivapithecus rather than to Ouranopithecus, but the fragmentary nature of the fossil makes evaluations difficult. Future discoveries of this Iranian hominoid are needed to determine its phylogenetic position with more certainty.
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